States have idiotic rules that schools must be open X days a year to receive funding. So schools do everything they can to stay open during disasters so they don't have to add days at the end of the school year.
Not for everyday use, but for large purchases, some places will require them to avoid the card processing fees or pass the fees to you.
For instance, when I paid tuition at college, it was an extra 3.5% if I paid with a card, so it was a couple hundred bucks cheaper to pay with a check.
Back around 2011, I remember reading a headline along the lines of "Samsung Galaxy 2 receives Google Android Ice Cream Sandwich on Sprint" and understood it completely while also thinking that just 5 years earlier that I'd call 911 if someone said that because they were clearly having a stroke.
I'm just saying the one key I'd be 100% okay losing is numlock. Turning it off when I'm typing fast can guck up an excel sheet SO fast.
And as great as althea simultaneous editing is kn SharePoint, the necessary saves all your edits live feature of it can be a real problem if you don't immediately notice a fuckup.
The 22nd amendment was written poorly, and prohibits someone from being elected into the office.
Terrifying fact: the Speaker of the House is third in line, and doesn't actually have to be a member of Congress. If the VP and President both leave office without a new VP being appointed, the Speaker of the House assumes the Presidency, bypassing both the 12th and 22nd amendments.
For decades Apple paid schools to teach on their computers. In the 80s and much of the 90s, all you'd find in computer labs was Macs.
It didn't work because PCs were just better for businesses at the time.